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Tag Archives: work spaces

Developer, Nestlé at odds over west end industrial land

Asher Greenberg – Globe and Mail

A major developer, the city, residents and Nestlé are squabbling over what to do with a patch of industrial land in the city’s west end.

Castlepoint Realty is proposing to build a mixed-use residential development next to the chocolate factory on Sterling Road – 45 new townhomes with live-work spaces, new office towers complete with urban agriculture rooftops, a public square, and revitalization of the heritage Tower Automotive building.

But Nestlé is not on board. In a letter to Toronto’s planning office, it expressed concerns over the introduction of residential units so close to its plant. Residents, however, generally support the bid by the developer to revitalize the desolate stretch of land.

You wouldn’t know there was anything worth arguing about by just passing through on Bloor Street. Rubble-strewn brownfields, dark alleys and former industrial buildings stretch a few square kilometres in Toronto’s South Junction Triangle neighbourhood, sandwiched between Bloor and Dundas, and sealed by GO train tracks on either side.

But there is life as well. A walk down one of those dark pot-holed alleys reveals parents picking up children from an aerial dance class, artists painting ceiling-high canvasses, and a man spray-painting a table for use in a cabaret number. Live-work lofts intermingle with family townhomes, auto-body shops lie a few blocks from the chic Zocalo bistro, and the smell of chocolate wafts from the giant Nestlé plant.

The site in dispute was home to Alcan – originally Northern Aluminum Co. – for more than 80 years. When it was constructed in 1919, the 10-storey building was among the tallest in Canada, and one of the first with an elevator. The city declared it a heritage site in 2005 shortly before then owner, Tower Automotive, went into bankruptcy.

Castlepoint purchased the plot in 2007 and partnered with Rio Tinto Alcan to clean up the property. The environmental remediation was “a great favour to the community,” said local business owner Heather Braaten. When plans for the construction of movie studios on the land fell through, the developers instead proposed a mixed-use site.

The trouble is Nestlé is concerned the factory that operates 24/7, with its noises, trucking, and smells, could become a source of friction with the new residents, said Sarah Phipps, the city planner handling this project. The “thoughtless juxtaposition of industrial and residential uses inevitably leads to complaints by the residential occupants,” Nestlé told the city, “in such a scenario, it is always the industrial user who suffers to a greater or lesser degree.”

At the last community meeting, in October, some residents countered that Ward 18’s other chocolate factory, Cadbury, has peaceably co-existed with its residential neighbours just across the street for many years.

The other problem is that Castlepoint’s development would mean the city loses more industrial employment land. Because of an overlapping study on this problem, the various stakeholders may have to wait up to a year for the planning department to conclude its report. “The city has a tendency to plan things to death,” said John C. O’Keefe Jr., a senior partner at Castlepoint.

Mr. O’Keefe said that Castlepoint has made an effort to hear the community’s concerns, hosting five or six meetings before submitting the application. At the recent meeting, Castlepoint chief executive officer Alfred Romano unexpectedly committed 10 per cent of the new residential units to social housing.

Castlepoint is negotiating this month with Artscape, a non-profit developer that subsidizes residential and work spaces for artists. The company has contributed below-market lofts to the re-development of the Distillery District, Liberty Village, and West Queen West, among other sites. Typically, Artscape mediates between private developers, artists and the wider community “to find a win-win-win scenario,” said CEO Tim Jones. Mr. Jones would not comment specifically on 158 Sterling, citing concerns over creating expectations too early in the negotiation process.

Whether the planning department ultimately recommends the project, in the end it will come down to a vote at City Hall late next year. The Ward’s Councillor, Ana Bailao, has not made a firm commitment regarding which way she’ll vote. This project “is going to be very interesting,” said Ms. Bailao’s constituency assistant, Anna Kral. “Because from what I’ve experienced, they are very hesitant about the residential. So you have to make a choice. Do we keep Nestlé or do we build up the community?”

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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416-388-1960

Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

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  • Carlaw’s raw condo power is gritty and industrial

    National Post – Alex New­man (www​.integri​ty​commu​ni​ca​tions​.ca)

    The times they are a changin’ along Car­law Avenue. Orig­i­nally a working-class neigh­bour­hood with a score of indus­trial sites — Wrigley’s, Colgate’s, Wood’s and a host of gar­ment fac­to­ries — it was said you could find a job just by walk­ing up the street.

    But with the man­u­fac­tur­ing sector’s demise, the ware­houses fell empty, and the nar­row row­houses on adja­cent streets started fill­ing with a “lot of multi-family arrange­ments,” accord­ing to Paul Young, who co-authored a 2000 study of the area.

    In the late 1990s, how­ever, sev­eral things came together at once. Jack Lay­ton was coun­cil­lor of the Don River ward, Jane Jacobs was vocal about strength­en­ing neigh­bour­hoods, and the city had started receiv­ing a trickle of appli­ca­tions to turn build­ings into legit­i­mate live/work spaces.

    Res­ur­rect­ing this neigh­bour­hood, though, meant find­ing a com­mon focus among the mix of res­i­dents — high tech and media arts pro­fes­sion­als along with a siz­able working-class population.

    Nat­u­rally, the build­ings play­ed a role. “It was an old indus­trial pocket but the build­ings are hand­some, and made it quite a desir­able area,” espe­cially for peo­ple in Toronto’s bur­geon­ing film indus­try, says urban plan­ner Denise Graham.

    It was also the dawn­ing of legit­i­mate live-work lofts for cre­ative types who liked the raw space, big win­dows and high ceil­ings. And hous­ing was sta­ble — you couldn’t get kicked out for liv­ing in your work space.

    When the study came out in 2000 — over­seen by Mr Lay­ton — it became a devel­op­ment touch­stone. It iden­ti­fied neigh­bour­hood defi­cien­cies such as dimmer-than-average street­lights, and made rec­om­men­da­tions about land­scap­ing, parks, pub­lic art, her­itage preser­va­tion, con­nec­tions to the water­front and how to improve the liv­abil­ity of Dun­das Street.

    For devel­op­ers, the area pre­sented an oppor­tu­nity. When loft devel­op­ment began on Car­law, “nobody really knew about the area,” says Brad Lamb, who has mar­keted two devel­op­ments (Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts at 233 Car­law and Print­ing Fac­tory Lofts at 201) and devel­oped two oth­ers (Work Lofts at 319 and Flat­iron Lofts at 1201 Dun­das). “It was dead and scruffy-looking, but a lot of peo­ple look­ing for authen­tic lofts liked the idea of a new-found area.”

    That’s when land there sold for $16 to $18 a build­able square foot; prices have now tripled to $40 to $50 per build­able square foot (still low com­pared to $125/sq. ft. in Yorkville and $80 at King and Cortland).

    And with unit prices ris­ing cor­re­spond­ingly — $500/sq. ft. com­pared to the orig­i­nal $310/sq. ft. — the area inhab­i­tants have changed. Mr. Young recently exam­ined growth pat­terns for a park process he was facil­i­tat­ing, and found dog own­er­ship was up while birth rates were down. The find­ings jibed with what he noticed was sell­ing: “a lot of bach­e­lors and one bed­rooms … to buy­ers who are mostly single.”

    That’s not exactly news, but it did raise ques­tions about how the neigh­bour­hood was chang­ing, and whether it was still afford­able. But afford­abil­ity is a com­pli­cated issue and depends on land costs, fin­ishes and unit size. While ear­lier devel­op­ments ben­e­fited from cheap land, they got fewer breaks on height and density.

    The neigh­bour­hood was a mix of mid-rise indus­trial and two-storey res­i­den­tial, so new con­struc­tion was meant to be a buffer. Although the height limit on Car­law is 18 meters, or about six storeys, devel­op­ers have suc­cess­fully appealed for increases — the Flat­iron Lofts, for exam­ple, is 11 storeys on Car­law and 10 on Dun­das. And on the north side of Dun­das, The Car­law will have 10 storeys on Dun­das and 12 on Car­law, plus a row of town­homes along Boston (they’re launch­ing in a sub­se­quent phase).

    The changes in den­sity and height allowance indi­cate to Mr. Lamb that the “area is due to inten­sify.” Given the avail­able indus­trial land, the press­ing need for hous­ing and the city’s direc­tive for inten­si­fi­ca­tion, he antic­i­pates the next build­ings may be higher still.

    But the city wants some­thing in return. When Mr. Lamb first bought on Car­law, he says he was told by coun­cil­lor Paula Fletcher that these were “employ­ment lands, and we’re not crazy about con­dos, so you have to offer employ­ment back to the city.”

    With the area’s job base chang­ing — Mr. Lamb believes the notion of an artist pop­u­la­tion is false — most of the newer projects must include an employ­ment com­po­nent. The sec­ond floors at Worklofts and Flat­iron Lofts, for exam­ple, have busi­ness cen­tres with board­rooms and wash­rooms. And from what he’s seen, the buy­ers are not artists, but den­tists, lawyers, media types and small businesses.

    Though Flat­iron has almost sold out its 80 suites, about 35% of raw com­mer­cial space is left. It’s not expected to last, espe­cially in the 400 to 500-sq.-ft. range, Mr. Lamb says, because there’s a “huge mar­ket for small-business space.”

    With so much change afoot, there’s a feel­ing of excite­ment. And design reflects this, espe­cially with the level of design skill seen in the new build­ings, by archi­tects skilled in graft­ing mod­ern skins — of glass, brick and steel — on to older indus­trial brick bodies.

    The Car­law is grounded with brick at both Car­law and Dun­das ends. Using brick, explains Prish Jain, the building’s archi­tect, “is meant to speak to the indus­trial her­itage of that neigh­bour­hood, speak to the exist­ing character.”

    The building’s large expanses of glass also “look for­ward and upward and be the urban build­ing that it is,” Mr. Jain adds. “It’s not enough to sug­gest his­toric, you also need to look for­ward by using mod­ern mate­ri­als, like the glass cur­tain wall fac­ing downtown.”

    Across the street at the Flat­iron Lofts, Core Archi­tects was hired to deal with the “strange” jog­ging inter­sec­tion at Dun­das and Car­law. Their con­cept — a mod­ern take on the flat iron — was to accom­mo­date the pie-shaped lot (a for­mer gas sta­tion) as well as the intersection.

    The Print­ing Fac­tory Lofts (at Queen and Car­law) took a preser­va­tion approach, res­ur­rect­ing the ware­house by retain­ing its orig­i­nal height at street level, and insert­ing a new-build mid-rise condo into the mid­dle. At the Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts, authen­tic loft spaces with con­crete floors and huge win­dows com­prise the orig­i­nal four floors, but the top four floors are new with glass, steel and brick.

    Worklofts, a new-build ware­house, has four floors in grey-purple Amer­i­can brick meant to blend with the street’s indus­trial look, while the upper seven floors — stepped back — are a lighter glass and aluminum.

    Design can also fos­ter more street-level pres­ence. Although much has changed since the 2000 study, its design rec­om­men­da­tions are still moti­vat­ing developers.

    Street­car CEO Les Malen, for exam­ple, was inspired to cre­ate an 11,000-sq.-ft. pub­lic lobby and court­yard at The Car­law in an attempt to relate to the street, and encour­age greater com­mu­nity engagement.

    Mr. Malen is cur­rently in nego­ti­a­tions with groups who will take respon­si­bil­ity for the pub­lic space. The ideas for its use are end­less: com­mu­nity events such as fash­ions shows or art exhibits; sea­sonal retail — the pop-up trend — for Hal­loween cos­tumes, or win­ter sport­ing goods; an inside farm­ers mar­ket — like the St. Lawrence Mar­ket — but with the option of spilling out­side into the courtyard.

    The con­cept, says Mr. Malen, is not “unusual down­town, but it is for the east end.”

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    Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960

    Lau­rin & Natalie Jef­frey are Toronto Real­tors with Cen­tury 21 Regal Realty.
    They did not write these arti­cles, they just repro­duce them here for peo­ple
    who are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

    ———————————————————————————————————————


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  • King West: The splish and the splash

    Lauren Ferranti-Ballem, National Post

    When complete strangers buy into a condo building, they’re in for a big surprise. It doesn’t take long before they’re going for a swim with one of their neighbours and befriending others at the pub, on the treadmill, or in the shops downstairs. Then it dawns on them: They’ve lucked in to a vibrant neighbourhood — and life is good. In a seven-part series, Post Homes takes a look at new condo communities within the city and the meeting places that make these neighbourhoods really hum.

    The water is cool and fresh, especially on this sweltering day, and as she dips her toes in, Michelle Robinson counts herself lucky to have this free, convenient cooling station so close to her King West condo.

    This oasis isn’t quite the decadent rooftop pool you might imagine. But for Ms. Robinson, 34, it’s even better: The splash pad in a tiny park has become the coolest place to meet up with friends this summer, along with their kids and her eight-month-old son, Declan. All appearances would seem to indicate — what with its trendy restaurants, plentiful patios, gyms and French bakeries peddling foie gras-glazed doggie biscuits — that the King West and Liberty Village neighbourhoods cater to the young, hip and blissfully unencumbered (save, perhaps, for a condo-sized pooch). But it would seem that Ms. Robinson and her splash pad posse are adjusting the area’s demographic and creating a new social scene around it.

    A decade ago, the Robinsons purchased a Strachan and King townhome because they were drawn to the nightlife in the area. Then along came baby. But even as their priorities have evolved with age, they’ve remained committed to grow with the neighbourhood. Today they live in an Electra loft, and later this summer they anticipate moving to Bliss, the second building in the Liberty Towers development just down the street. “It’s funny: I can see our old home and our new one under construction from where we live now. For us, a condo isn’t a starter home, it’s long term,” she says. “We’re known as ‘the recruiters’ to our friends. There’s a group of us living here, all within four blocks of one another.”

    Just behind the happening splash pad are new bocce courts, another site of family-friendly gatherings. “I probably shouldn’t say this, but sometimes we’ll sneak in drinks and hang out as the sun goes down,” Ms. Robinson says. “We use Trinity Bellwoods for typical park stuff too, like the playground and my stroller-fit classes, but we also host little parties on the grass with friends and food — it’s like our extended backyard.”

    And while they no longer spend their twilight hours trawling the neighbourhood bars, Liberty Village keeps the Robinsons very busy. They’re regulars at the Brazen Head Irish Pub, they keep perfect attendance at Sunday brunch at School, a cheeky academia-themed spot popular for its super cheesy French toast, and they never miss the farmer’s market that takes over the parking lot between Atlantic Avenue and the shops in the Liberty Market building on Hanna Street.

    An ongoing multi-million dollar reno of an old munitions factory by Lifetime Developments, Liberty Market is alive with an eclectic retail mix: A noodle bar coexists with a dance studio — you can see future so-you-think-you-can-dancers through the windows at night — and a young, hopeful couple just opened a cheese shop here. Initially, the food and drink outlets existed mainly to feed and water the nine-to-fivers in the area, but as the modern glass boxes keep multiplying, the neighourhood is just as alive at night as it is during the day.

    This is also the site of Liberty Market Lofts, a 13-storey building of live-work spaces that will showcase such urban amenities as a tool room and a basketball half court. “I’ll be down there shooting hoops for sure,” says Rob Whitfield, future loft inhabitant. He’s also the owner of condo furniture purveyor Casalife, one of the original tenants in the Liberty Market building. Seven years ago he would watch as random cars rumbled down the dirt road in front of his store, praying they were potential customers. Today, he chuckles as the Ossington bus follows its paved route. “You know you’ve made it when you get public transit,” he jokes.

    To rehydrate after a game of hoops, Mr. Whitfield will order up a pint over a vintage billiard table at the Academy of Spherical Arts — like his business, another one of the early settlers in Liberty Village. “The residents in this area are fiercely loyal and patronize all the little shops. We want each other to do well,” he says. “I don’t know many other areas with this sense of pride and ownership.”

    For his part, Stan Cho will be raising a glass in support of the Brazen Head, a three-storey bar with pub fare, flat screens and a massive wrap-around patio that has become a community centre of sorts for the locals. A 32-year-old real estate agent and future resident of King West Condos in Liberty Village, Mr. Cho’s purchase speaks to the social strength of the neighbourhood. “I see new homes come up all the time, and I’m always looking for investment properties,” he says. “But the fact that I plan to live here means it’s something pretty special. The building’s amenities and the area are unbelievable.”

    The development’s three towers will share rooftop terrace space totalling a half-acre, an indoor pool and hot tubs with a walkout to a sunken Roman garden, five-pin bowling, a 30-seat screening room and a virtual games room for Wii addicts. “That’s 30,000 square feet of amenity space where residents can gather,” boasts Scott McCullum, senior vice-president of developer Plazacorp. “And as great as it is to have these outdoor terraces, we still have a few months out of the year where we have to be inside — that’s where the bowling and golf simulator come in.” It also doesn’t hurt, says Mr. Cho, that a strip mall featuring 24-hour groceries and gym, an LCBO, movie rentals and hot restaurants are so close by.

    Slip under the CN railpath that separates Liberty Village from King West and you’ll find yet more condos and condos in development — among them DNA 3, Fashion House and Thompson Residences — and a ton of those hot restaurants. This is where Mark Wadden feels most at home. He and his wife have purchased a suite in the forthcoming Thompson Residences building, adjacent to the hotel of the same name, both developed by King West impresario Peter Freed.

    “There is a true community feel here, and I think that’s due in large part to Freed’s efforts,” Mr. Wadden says. “There are always social events for residents when new buildings open. His developments encompass a lifestyle.” The Thompson lifestyle comes complete with five-star fringe benefits: a party room and in-house catering for entertaining, and a rooftop infinity pool and lounge, each one exclusive to residents and separate from the hotel. “I won’t be able to get my wife away from that pool,” he says.

    Outside of his home to be, Mr. Wadden eats up the King West scene — literally. He cites Marben for its dinner-then-dance-party vibe, and Buca and Kiwe for their crafty menus. But most of all, he’s charmed by the small-town feeling he gets here. “I grew up on the East Coast, and my parents are still in Cape Breton, and they never understood why I wanted to come to Toronto,” he says. “But this neighbourhood is the friendliest, most social place I’ve ever lived.” His parents may now understand: The last time they visited the city, they nearly missed the curtain call for a theatre performance, because their son was continuously sidelined by friends on the walk over.

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    Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

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